John wrote to show that Christ was
the Messiah, the Divine Son of God.

"If
you love me, you will keep my commandments. And I will ask the Father, and
he will give you another Advocate to be with you always. Jesus answered
and said to him, "Whoever loves me will keep my word, and my Father will love
him, and we will come to him and make our dwelling with him. Whoever does
not love me does not keep my words; yet the word you hear is not mine but that
of the Father who sent me. I have told you this while I am with you.
The Advocate, the holy spirit that the Father will send in my name - he will
teach you everything and remind you of all that I told you."

Some
businesses boast they have 'cut out the middlemen' to bring savings to
customers. Strictly speaking, however, "cutting out the middlemen" really
means reducing costs by rearranging the locations of warehouses and hiring new
middlemen to take phone calls or tend the showroom. Proficient middlemen
make it possible to communicate efficiently the policies of the boss and conduct
business well. Middlemen are necessary in any social organization and are
required by our nature as social beings.

Perhaps
it comes as no surprise that Christ Himself uses middlemen. In the Gospel,
Christ promises that, "Heaven and earth shall pass away, but my words shall not
pass away." (Mt 24-25) Yet, He had no scribes following Him about (except
to put Him to test) and He kept no personal diary (until, one supposes, Dan
Brown of Da Vinci Code fame conjures up one). Christ uses middlemen - the
Apostles, the Evangelists, popes, bishops, and priests within the Church - to
pass His words down to us.

Messages
can easily be distorted when passed down through human instrumentality.
Anyone who has played the "Telephone" game of whispering a message from person
to person will bear witness to how a simple message can be grotesquely distorted
by middlemen. This explains why it was necessary for Christ to send the
Holy Spirit to guarantee the authenticity of the message handed down. In
today's Gospel, before His ascension into heaven, Christ promised, "The
Advocate, the Holy Spirit, whom the Father will send in my name, will teach you
everything and remind you all that I told you." (Jn 14:24-26) These words
of Christ reveal how He Himself relies on the Holy Spirit to guarantee that
nothing is lost in the transmission by His chosen middlemen.

In
the spiritual life, as in the worldly life of commerce, we may discover a
tendency to dispense with middlemen. We may prefer to think, that that
Holy Spirit speaks to us personally, exclusively, directly and infallibly.
Of course it is true that a properly formed conscience is one's infallible guide
as the true voice of God. But after the fall of Adam, conscience is easily
distorted by our sinful inclinations. Because of our weakness, in
difficult circumstances we especially need the light of truth from middlemen
appointed for the purpose. When a priest accurately presents authentic
Church teaching as a divinely appointed middleman, he speaks for the Holy
Spirit. It is a grave mistake to think that the Holy Spirit intervenes
with special revelations that contradict those of the teaching Church or violate
her lawful authority.

Middlemen
themselves need to be open to the good graces of the Holy Spirit. The
truth they transmit is not their own, nor theirs to manipulate. They must
be aware of the many ears that itch to be affirmed in their error. St.
Paul warns St. Timothy, "Preach the word: be insistent in season, out of season:
reprove, entreat, rebuke in all patience and doctrine. For there shall be
a time, when they will not endure sound doctrine; but, according to their own
desires, they will heap to themselves teachers, having itching ears: and will
indeed turn away their hearing from the truth, but will be turned unto fables."
(2 Tm 4:2-4) Priests and bishops themselves need to beg the Holy Spirit to
be their guide in directing them to the authentic truths of Christ as taught by
the Catholic Church. In humility they need to recognize their role as
lowly middlemen and beg for the courage to hold fast to the truths of Christ.
The Church's middlemen with Christ must say, "The word you hear is not mine but
that of the Father who sent me." (Jn 14:16)

It
is perhaps part of our fallen human nature that we are impatient with middlemen.
We often prefer to break the rules of good order and, "go to the top"
immediately without dealing with customer relations representatives. We
prefer to bully directly for lower prices or otherwise to get what we want,
never taking "no" for an answer. It may work in, "getting my way" in
worldly terms. But circumventing the middlemen as a mater of routine
disrupts good order and reveals a pattern of selfishness, even pride.

"Cutting
out the middleman" in the spiritual life by pretending that we do not need the
Church in our relationship with God is a sure means of choking off the action of
the Holy Spirit. Christ and His Church are one. Christ is the final
arbiter of truth and the Holy Spirit inflames the Church with his truth
throughout the ages. It takes humility - and the grace of the Holy Spirit - to
allow the Church to remind us daily of all that Christ has given us.